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Potentially toxic metals in irrigation water, soil, and vegetables and their health risks using Monte Carlo models

Scientific Reports 2023 40 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 60 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Maxwell Omeje, Muyiwa Michael Orosun, Samuel Nwabachili, Muyiwa Michael Orosun, Hitler Louis, Samuel Nwabachili, Reem F. Alshehri, Hitler Louis, Hussein K. Okoro, Maxwell Omeje, Ibtehaj F. Alshdoukhi, Hitler Louis, Hussein K. Okoro, Clement O. Ogunkunle, Hitler Louis, Hussein K. Okoro, Hitler Louis, Fakoya A. Abdulhamid, Fakoya A. Abdulhamid, Stephen Erhonmonsele Osahon, Stephen Erhonmonsele Osahon, Adamu Usman Mohammed, Hitler Louis, Emmanuel Olusegun Ehinlafa, Emmanuel Olusegun Ehinlafa, Sodiq Omotayo Yunus, Sodiq Omotayo Yunus, Oluwatobi O. Ife-Adediran, Oluwatobi O. Ife-Adediran

Summary

Researchers measured toxic metals including arsenic, cadmium, chromium, and lead in irrigation water, soil, and vegetables in Nigeria, finding levels that exceeded safety guidelines in all cases. The toxic metals accumulated in commonly eaten vegetables like spinach and cabbage, posing cancer and non-cancer health risks to adults and children. While focused on heavy metals, this research is relevant to microplastics because microplastics in agricultural soil can absorb and transport these same toxic metals into crops.

Food safety has become a serious global concern because of the accumulation of potentially toxic metals (PTMs) in crops cultivated on contaminated agricultural soils. Amongst these toxic elements, arsenic (As), cadmium (Cd), chromium (Cr), and lead (Pb) receive worldwide attention because of their ability to cause deleterious health effects. Thus, an assessment of these toxic metals in the soils, irrigation waters, and the most widely consumed vegetables in Nigeria; Spinach (Amaranthushybridus), and Cabbage (Brassica oleracea) was evaluated using inductively coupled plasma-optical emission spectroscopy (ICP-OES). The mean concentration (measured in mg kg<sup>-1</sup>) of the PTMs in the soils was in the sequence Cr (81.77) > Pb(19.91) > As(13.23) > Cd(3.25), exceeding the WHO recommended values in all cases. This contamination was corroborated by the pollution evaluation indices. The concentrations (measured in mg l<sup>-1</sup>) of the PTMs in the irrigation water followed a similar pattern i.e. Cr(1.87) > Pb(1.65) > As(0.85) > Cd(0.20). All the PTMs being studied, were found in the vegetables with Cr (5.37 and 5.88) having the highest concentration, followed by Pb (3.57 and 4.33), and As (1.09 and 1.67), while Cd (0.48 and 1.04) had the lowest concentration (all measured in mg kg<sup>-1</sup>) for cabbage and spinach, respectively. The concentration of the toxic metals was higher in spinach than in cabbage, which may be due to the redistribution of the greater proportion of the metals above the ground tissue, caused by the bioavailability of metals in the aqueous phase. Expectedly, the hazard index (HI),and carcinogenic risk values of spinach were higher than that of cabbage. This implies that spinach poses potentially higher health risks. Similarly, the Monte Carlo simulation results reveal that the 5th percentile, 95th percentile, and 50th percentile of the cumulative probability of cancer risks due to the consumption of these vegetables exceeds the acceptable range of 1.00E-6 and 1.00E-4. Thus, the probable risk of a cancerous effect is high, and necessary remedial actions are recommended.

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